By Mortz C. Ortigoza
URDANETA CITY – The outgoing mayor of this thriving
city in Northern Luzon cited his loss for the vice mayoral derby here because
he did not resort to vote buying.
“Why will I spend say P30 million to vote buy? That’s profligacy and a folly because I could no longer recoup that based on my three years’ term salary as vice mayor,” Mayor Amadeo “Bobom” Gregorio Perez IV told this
writer in Pilipino during a visit by the latter to his office here.
A city vice mayor just like here receives a remuneration of P100,000 monthly.
The nine years’ stint mayor thought his sterling performances
as the chief executive here will be his show window to voters to intelligently
vote for him but he was wrong.
According to the official count of the Commission on
Election, Mayor Perez’s opponent vice mayoralty challenger Jimmy “Jing” Parayno
routed him with 16, 302 lead votes out of the 67, 729 voters.
"Wala, pera pera na lang ang mga botante ngayon," he deplored.
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ROUT - Urdaneta City outgoing mayor Bobom Perez and his vice mayoralty rival who routed him in the last poll Vice
Mayor -Elect Jing Parayno. |
His younger sister was dumped by Vice Mayor Rammy
Parayno with 8,635 margin in the mayoral race where the lady bet got 30, 060
while Parayno dusted her with 38, 695 votes.
Jing Parayno is the nephew of
Mayor-Elect Parayno.
The outgoing
mayor only smiled when a radio broadcaster told him that vote
buying was practical if one runs for mayorship because the winner can reclaim his
expenses through the cut given by suppliers and contractors who transact
business with the local government unit.
“The vice mayorship is a thankless job since the occupant cannot do an
abracadabra for his advantage because he has no direct access with government
funds,” the radio commentator said in the vernacular.
Perez’s congressman and mayor
grandfather and father former mayor and former solon Amadito Perez, Jr.
governed this burgeoning vegetable and cattle hubs of Northern and Central
Luzon since the 1960s.
The young Perez told this newspaper that he will not
seek reelection for the mayorship in the May 2022 election because “I am retired already”.
This“retire quip” was not new with the chief executive because last 2017 he mentioned this when asked if he will
seek the congressional race in the May 13, 2019 election versus Fifth District
Congressman Amado T. Espino, Jr. after he bowed down from office in June 31 this year.
In October last year, he accompanied his sister where they both filed at the Comelec here for their chosen elective post
“That is not true. After I stepped down from office, I consider myself retired
from politics".
Espino was trounced out by Binalonan Mayor Ramon “Monmon”
Guico III in that poll.
“I asked Bobom
last year that he run for congressman but he begged off and told me to instead
challenge Espines,” Guico told recently this writer.
Guico upset Espino by 3,512 votes where the former
and latter scored 124, 136, 121, 624 votes respectively.
Sources close to the exiting mayor said that
after the one-year ban for public office, Perez, a close party ally of Davao
City Mayor Sara Duterte, will either be whisked to a post in the Department of
Agriculture or at the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA).
Perez told this newspaper that when Mayor Duterte
asked Malacanang’s advisers if where could Hukbong Pagbabago lead by Duterte
and some senatorial bets do their stump in February at the humongous province
Pangasinan, Custom Commissioner Isidro Lapena, a village mate of
Perez here, told the presidential daughter to instead talk with Perez and not
the governor of the province.
“Mayor Sarah called me that the PSG and PMS will be coming in a short
period of time and my sister and I were asked to look for someone to sew for our blue party’s vest,” he smilingly narrated.
He cited that he was the only Pangasinan politician
who was with Duterte and party at the guest lounge of the Cultural and Sports
Center while Governor Amado Espino III and his father congressman Espino
who were not members of Hukbong were at the stage waiting for the guests to
speak to the big crowd the mayor and his village chiefs brought to the Center.
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